BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  Pentagon's AI push
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Wed, 6 May 2026 09:16:22 -0500
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7 of the biggest names in AI, including OpenAI, Google, Microsoft, and 
Amazon, are now moving into military systems  but one major player is missing 
from the list, and that raises uncomfortable questions about where this 
technology is heading

Date:
Wed, 06 May 2026 10:03:10 +0000

A sweeping Pentagon push to integrate AI into military systems includes 
nearly every major tech player except Anthropic, exposing a growing divide 
over how far such technology should go:  The U.S. Department of Defense
has signed up most of the most powerful AI model developers to bring their 
systems directly into military operations. OpenAI, Google , Microsoft , 
Amazon Web Services, Nvidia , SpaceX, and Reflection AI will all help the 
Pentagon speed up the transition toward what it calls an AI-first fighting 
force. 

The idea is to make AI-powered tools to process information faster and to 
suggest decisions in complex environments. The companies involved have agreed 
that their tools can be used for any lawful use, a very broad standard, too 
broad, it seems, for Anthropic. Conspicuous in its absence, the Claude 
developer has been fighting with the DoD over how its AI can be used for 
months. Central to Anthropic's concerns is how its AI might be deployed for 
domestic surveillance and fully autonomous lethal systems. Perhaps the 
company has seen how AI models seem comfortable with nuclear threats in war 
games.

The government responded by branding Anthropic a supply-chain risk to block 
it from defense contracts. Anthropic has challenged that decision. From lab 
to battlefield The other companies are choosing to engage fully with 
government contracts, accepting broad terms in exchange for access and 
influence despite pushback and skepticism from consumers, and some of the 
leadership of the companies themselves. 

There are practical implications for how AI evolves in military contexts as a 
result of the deal. By moving forward with multiple partners, the Pentagon 
reduces its reliance on any single company. Without Anthropic, however, there 
can't be any claim to industry-wide unity. 

Defense officials appear to believe that excluding Anthropic could put 
pressure on them to return to negotiations, especially as rival firms deepen 
their involvement. Whether that approach succeeds remains to be seen.

Still, the DoD is investing heavily in AI, with tens of billions of dollars 
earmarked for programs. The partnerships with private companies make 
technical sense, as they have the most advanced AI models. Strengths and 
abilities The companies themselves bring different strengths and abilities, 
incorporating everything from chips to software to deployment. AI is becoming 
embedded in the infrastructure of modern warfare at a pace reflecting both 
competitive pressure and the belief that these systems can deliver a decisive 
advantage. 

What remains less clear is how the boundaries will be defined as the 
technology matures. Questions about oversight, accountability, and unintended 
consequences are still being worked out, even as deployment accelerates. 

Anthropic holding out doesn't mean the integration won't happen, but it does 
make the underlying tensions harder to ignore. Even as AI becomes central to 
national security, there are still unresolved debates about how far it should 
go and who gets to decide.

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/ai-platforms-assistants/7-of-the-biggest-names-in-ai
-including-openai-google-microsoft-and-amazon-are-now-moving-into-military-sys
tems-but-one-major-player-is-missing-from-the-list-and-that-raises-uncomfortab
le-questions-about-where-this-technology-is-heading

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